Big Deahl Productions And Resolution Production Group Pioneer Unique New In-Studio Production Process Called “Environmental LED Immersion”

Working in Tandem, BIG DEAHL and Resolution are Now Offering this Process To Commercial Producers and Agency Creatives as a Highly Cost-Effective And Efficient Means By Which to Shoot Multiple Locations in A Single Day

Last Updated: January 8, 2016 6:22 am GMT

(Chicago, Illinois--January 8, 2016) Acclaimed commercial production company BIG DEAHL PRODUCTIONS, in tandem with Resolution Productions Group, have announced the availability to the industry of a pioneering new technique the two companies have developed by integrating LED –Light Emitting Diode - screens in-studio to allow production to shoot several “locations” all in one day. The companies have named this new process "Environmental LED Immersion" or "ELI".

BIG DEAHL PRODUCTIONS CHICAGO / LOS ANGELES is home to directors David Deahl and Todd Klein, among the Top Tabletop Directors in the U.S. The company formed a strategic alliance in July 2015 with Resolution Productions Group in Chicago.

BIG DEAHL director Todd Klein, gaffer Marty Rhomberg, and Resolution Productions Group have been working together for several months to perfect this new technique -- one that allows directors to shoot multiple “virtual” locations in a single day, while never leaving the stage.

David Deahl, Founder/Director, BIG DEAHL PRODUCTIONS, said, “The new Environmental LED Immersion process could seriously change the way much of location production needs are met in the coming years. The use of LED light panels is only going to get better as the technology and use of these methods progresses. Resolution Productions Group has given BIG DEAHL the opportunity to exploit this exciting medium and help to innovate the way production can become more versatile and efficient in the future. If used properly, this method can not only stretch a location budget, but will also allow for many more diverse locations to be shot all within one day.”

Adds Stephanie Franke, VP/Creative Director, MARC USA/Chicago, “Those of us in the advertising industry are often forced to pull rabbits out of our hats, and this LED-centric technology can help us do just that! Integrating this process into the production pipeline is a huge win for creatives, producers, clients, and, of course, viewers. Environmental LED Immersion (ELI) delivers a much more realistic sense of ‘place’ in a way that better accommodates the budgets of many of our clients.”

Said Snake Roth, Executive Producer, MARC USA/Chicago, "When a creative department thanks you for sending them to a screening demo on their own time and dime – you know it was worth it. We are a fairly small agency and work with limited budgets -- the Environmental LED Immersion technology will open some doors that have previously been closed to us. The folks at BIG DEAHL have spent a lot of time perfecting this for advertising. Thanks to them for teaching this old dog a new trick!"

Jeff Facklis, Resolution Owner/Executive Vice President, said, “Every day, someone thinks of another benefit to using this method. I’m thrilled that there could potentially be so many more uses for our LED panels.”

GENESIS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL LED IMMERSION PROCESS:

The genesis of this process began when David Deahl and Marty Rhomberg attended a seminar hosted by the late Fletcher Camera in early 2015. The presenters were a small group of “techies” who were demonstrating how some of the visual effects were created in the movie “Gravity.” Deahl and Rhomberg were shown a room that was built from LED panels with a gimbaled-rig to support the actors at various angles. Once video images were fed into the panels, a virtual outer space was created. However, the resolution of the LED panels was too coarse to use as the actual background for “Gravity,” so these images were only used as ambient light and reflections within the final film.

After this demonstration, Rhomberg and Klein realized that Resolution Productions Group had a huge inventory of LED panels. They knew there was something about this versatile process that could be offered to the advertising industry. Klein immediately saw the potential in using higher resolution LED panels as the actual backgrounds for commercial, industrial and multi-media productions.

To pursue this new LED production idea for commercial use, Klein and Rhomberg began testing Resolution’s LED panels on some small tabletop subjects, to see if the eye would accept the imagery. Klein used a longer lens with a fast T-stop and placed the focus on the foreground subject, allowing the background to fall out-of-focus. “The fact that we were able to present a subject on a lakefront beach, and a half hour later to present a similar subject in a window display on Michigan Avenue, simply blew my mind!” Klein said.

These first tests were so successful that they decided to test something on a larger scale to see how far they could push the technique. Klein and Rhomberg went to an L-train platform in Chicago, as Klein shot a background element of an L-train. Once back in the studio, they set up lighting to mimic the L-platform location. With Rhomberg then standing in front of the LED background (approx. 10’ x 16’), Klein shot them together, and the effect was stunning.

Remarking on the test video, Rhomberg commented, “I was totally convinced that I was actually standing on that L-train platform!”

Because Rhomberg could see the action being projected onto the LED panels, he was able to interact with the virtual L-train in real time, as it pulled away from the station. “This process could serve as a huge benefit to actors who normally would be looking at a blank green wall behind them,” says Deahl. The results of this initial test were so positive, that Klein and Rhomberg are currently involved in further tests to see if it would be possible to shoot a full figure subject. To accomplish this, they would build up a high-gloss floor off the stage floor so that the LED panels can be lowered to drop below the raised floor, thus creating a seamless transition between the LED panels and foreground.

Says Klein, “We’re very optimistic that we will be able to duplicate an actual location with a full, head-to-toe, subject standing in front of the LED wall.”

Klein has been experimenting with the Environmental LED Immersion (ELI) process for several months now. He has discovered that certain methods give much better results. The L-train platform test was very simple with nothing going on in the background other than the train slowly pulling out from the station -- yet it was very convincing.

Klein has determined that including other elements -- like people walking in the background or in front of the lens, or the camera moving off of a foreground news stand onto the subject—which would include more interaction with the background plus sound effects – the end results would be even far more convincing and compelling.

“When this process is combined with proper lensing, lighting, T-stops and so on, it’s easy to see how this could give agency creatives far more capabilities for conceiving any imaginable scene from around the world without having to involve the expenses of traveling film equipment, crews and agency personel to those actual physical locations,” Klein adds.

BENEFITS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL LED IMMERSION PROCESS:

1. Background location elements can be shot very simply with just the director and a single agency creative.

2. Most often the locations wouldn’t have to be lit, which eliminates a lighting crew.

3. The color transfer could be unsupervised much like dailies (minor corrections can also be done on-set).

4. Shooting multiple locations in one day without ever leaving the stage.

5. Eliminates costly green screen clean-up.

6. No rain days.

7. There’s no background green screen that blooms when the T-stop, focal length or focus changes.

8. Can eliminate having to shoot at night because a shoot can be disruptive to a location’s business.

9. Eliminates the need to reset an expensive and timely background action because the foreground action wasn’t right (like an explosion).

10. The background naturally refracts in people’s glasses, liquids, glass objects, etc. With green screen this can be costly to replace natural light reflections and refractions.

11. Out-the-window backgrounds for interior car scenes can be emitted as the actual background and as ambient light for the actors and car interior.

12. It would be possible to shoot running video (POV of someone running down a street) and then put it as background in the studio with someone running on a treadmill.

13. Could eliminate location permits.

14. Talent has something to interact with instead of a blank green background.

15. Interior sets could look more expensive than what a budget will allow. For example, one might only have to build a kitchen island rather than an entire expensive kitchen set.

16. Can provide action imagery as seen from outside the windows of room sets. Imagine shooting a house interior, as if in a hurricane, for an insurance company.

17. Reduces the need to hire extras.

About BIG DEAHL PRODUCTIONS:

Launched in Chicago in 1973, BIG DEAHL PRODUCTIONS is an acclaimed commercial production company that works with both national and international clients in Tabletop and Live Action film. Since its formation, the company has been dedicated to creating a fun and collaborative environment by which to craft powerfully original and visually stunning work.

Offering all-encompassing facilities in Chicago and Los Angeles. Both locations have studio space with the latest technologies and equipment, BIG DEAHL is able to oversee all aspects of production, allowing for the most creative flexibility, innovation, and ease to fit the needs of any project. In addition, the company now offers its clients a comprehensive range of post production services.